I have exchanged the voltage regulator on the alt
I could be wrong but I heard somewhere alternators would self-excite without a 12v source given a lot of rpm (even if they are not the self-exciting type).
Mine seems to require some rpm above idle to get the alternator going but it's more like 1400 rpm, not 3000.
I'm thinking it wouldn't hurt to have another ground right off the alternator, would be easy and cheap to do.
Quote from: bajacalal on July 07, 2009, 09:31:42 amI could be wrong but I heard somewhere alternators would self-excite without a 12v source given a lot of rpm (even if they are not the self-exciting type). Yup, good suggestion and I believe you are correct... and so I went back thru the original post... I thought I had read that the light eventually went out at 3000 RPM (hence my thinking that the exciter circuit must be OK) but that's not actually there.So, OP, does the ALT light come on at all, or it stays dark the whole time but the tach wakes up at 3000 RPM?If it stays dark the whole time then I recant my comments about the blue wire... you'll want to take a close look at that circuit. If you remove the blue wire from the alternator, ground it, and then turn the key to "on" the ALT light should come on. If not... could be the connector, the wire back to the cluster, the cluster harness, or the LED itself... they go in two ways, and only one way is correct.Quote from: bajacalal on July 07, 2009, 09:31:42 amMine seems to require some rpm above idle to get the alternator going but it's more like 1400 rpm, not 3000.Yeah, standard operating procedure for Bosch alternators... my 1986 owners manual mentions this behaviour specifically.Quote from: bajacalal on July 07, 2009, 09:31:42 amI'm thinking it wouldn't hurt to have another ground right off the alternator, would be easy and cheap to do.Also a good suggestion IMHO... you'd think with all that metal-to-metal contact grounds would never be an issue... but sadly, the more grounds the better. I always add a redundant alternator ground whenever I relay the headlights... better safe than sorry I figure?!
Blue wire should show about 12v with the engine not running, key in "on" position. The exciter voltage is routed through the LED. Make sure the LED is installed with the correct orientation as it only operates in one orientation...but would then glow once the alternator excites if installed backwards, right?Rephrased from the Bentley manual: Test by grounding the connector on the blue wire to the engine (with the key in the on position, engine off). If the light does not come on now, you have a bad connection at the ignition switch or faulty wiring somewhere along this circuit. If the light comes on, the regulator or brushes are faulty or not making good contact. My vote is faulty connection around the ignition switch or in the dash/cluster somewhere. To narrow it down you might have to do some probing with an ohm-meter, checking for a break in the circuit somewhere.
I could be wrong but I heard somewhere alternators would self-excite without a 12v source given a lot of rpm (even if they are not the self-exciting type). Mine seems to require some rpm above idle to get the alternator going but it's more like 1400 rpm, not 3000.That's a good point, the alternator case must be grounded properly for the exciter circuit to work, make sure it's making a nice clean contact to the engine block and that the engine to chassis ground is making good contact. I'm thinking it wouldn't hurt to have another ground right off the alternator, would be easy and cheap to do.
Quote from: Peter on July 06, 2009, 02:43:04 pmI have exchanged the voltage regulator on the alt A couple of questions to help diagnose:- was the voltage regulator you put in new?- how did the alternator's commutator look?Failure to excite until 3000 RPM means that it *is* exciting, which means the blue wire, dash, cluster, etc are pretty much working. Some things to check:- voltage regulator, unless you know for sure the one you installed was good- worn commutator - alternator not grounding correctly... meaning one of the big grounds to the tranny perhaps